Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The PTAs put on the Geography Bowls. Very worthwhile!
This sounds interesting. Can you tell us more about it?
I think it started at Woodlin ES and spread to other schools. Over the course of 3-5 grade, the kids do the US, half the world, then the other half. All students get a 30-40 page packet of material, prepared over the years by parents. Different schools have adapted the materials over time. After a month or so, they compete to be on grade level teams. Teams then prepare to answer questions at the school assembly Geo Bowl. Woodlin is in the midst of theirs right now, I believe, so if you were interested, you could go on their PTA website to learn more about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The PTAs put on the Geography Bowls. Very worthwhile!
This sounds interesting. Can you tell us more about it?
Anonymous wrote:The PTAs put on the Geography Bowls. Very worthwhile!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't like the Scholastic book fair either. Expensive books, and not a lot of kids buy. I do like the used book fair our elementary school runs. It's a ton of work for the PTA, but they gather donations and each kid is allowed to pick out two books. That encourages a love of reading for all kids.
Can you please give some more details about how you make this successful? Are there any issues with “allowed” books or an overwhelming amount of donations of baby board books instead of on-level elementary books? Any tips would be super appreciated!
Our school does a low-key chess club for a half hour before school - some parents kindly come in and supervise the kids playing each other and sometimes set up a puzzle for them to try to solve. PTA helps out with room rental cost and the whole thing is a big success.
Back to school picnic is a lovely way for new families to get welcomed.
We hand out a little cash to each of the teachers for room set up at the beginning of the year and each grade hosts a staff appreciation lunch once a month.
STEM night and all-school concerts are wonderful.
Cultural Arts programming is always a huge hit... we try to do several a year, and it really reaches all the students, not just the ones whose parents can bring them into out-of school activities.
Anonymous wrote:I don't like the Scholastic book fair either. Expensive books, and not a lot of kids buy. I do like the used book fair our elementary school runs. It's a ton of work for the PTA, but they gather donations and each kid is allowed to pick out two books. That encourages a love of reading for all kids.
Anonymous wrote:I don't like the Scholastic book fair either. Expensive books, and not a lot of kids buy. I do like the used book fair our elementary school runs. It's a ton of work for the PTA, but they gather donations and each kid is allowed to pick out two books. That encourages a love of reading for all kids.